Home / Full timeline / James Nickens enlists and serves in the navy in Virginia. After his death the state government awards his son 200 acres of land in Ohio.
James Nickens enlists and serves in the navy in Virginia. After his death the state government awards his son 200 acres of land in Ohio.
1815
James Nickens enlisted in the navy at the start of the American Revolution. Nickens served on several vessels, including the Norfolk Revenge for over two years. Nickens performed land service at the Lancaster Courthouse for the remainder of the war. He was prevented from fighting at the battle of Eutaw Springs and instead was responsible for the baggage. Nickens returned to Virginia in 1818 where he received the standard veterans' pension of $96 per year. After Nickens's death in 1838, the state government awarded his son, James, Jr., a grant of 200 acres of land in Ohio for his father's service in the revolution.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.